AT&T Door-to-Door Salespeople Quote False Rates and Promotional Terms
AT&T door salespeople use inflated promotional offers — lower rates, phone trade-in payoffs — to close contracts, and these terms are not honored after activation. Customers are left locked into contracts at higher rates with outstanding device balances from their previous carrier. Door-to-door sales deception is a documented practice that regulators have struggled to address in the telecom sector.
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Similar Problems
surfaced semanticallyDoor-to-Door Telecom Sales Reps Misrepresent Promotions and Trade-ins
AT&T and other carriers use door-to-door sales teams who quote promotional rates and trade-in payoffs that are either unavailable or have undisclosed conditions. Customers sign up based on verbal terms, then receive higher bills and missing trade-in credits — with no recourse after device financing begins. The sales channel operates with minimal accountability because contracts are signed digitally on-the-spot with no time for comparison.
T-Mobile Sales Reps Misrepresent Pricing, Perks, and Phone Trade-In Reimbursements
T-Mobile sales representatives quote pricing and promotional benefits that do not materialize, including phone payoff reimbursements that never arrive. Customers discover their actual bill is higher than their previous carrier after it is too late to reverse the switch. Point-of-sale promise tracking and promotional fulfillment monitoring tools address a real consumer protection gap.
AT&T Fails to Honor Carrier Switch Reimbursement Promises
AT&T entices customers to switch from other carriers by promising to pay off outstanding device balances, then fails to deliver on the reimbursement after the customer has already ported their number. The practice traps customers who have already left their previous carrier with outstanding device debt and no recourse against AT&T's unfulfilled promise.
AT&T Sales Reps Quote False Pricing and Usage Terms for Business Internet Plans
AT&T business Internet Air sales representatives quote $70/month pricing with unlimited usage, but first bills arrive at over $185 with data caps. The misrepresentation occurs at point of sale and customer service refuses to honor quoted terms. Systematic sales price misrepresentation that cannot be corrected through support is a structural deceptive trade practice.
AT&T Rejects Trade-Ins After Promising Free Phone Upgrades, Charging Full Price
AT&T sales staff promise free phone upgrades contingent on trade-ins but later reject the trade-in device, billing customers the full retail price without recourse. Customers discover the $1,100+ charge after the fact with no path to reverse it. This is a systemic deceptive promotion practice in telecom retail sales that affects a large volume of device upgrade customers.
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